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DISCUSSION <br /> Although it is not permissible to modify the PMC to impose more stringent accessibility <br /> requirements for covered projects, other options and opportunities are available to <br /> improve the accessibility of new residential housing and ensure it can provide suitable <br /> living arrangements for as wide a range of occupants as possible. <br /> In reviewing these various opportunities, it is important to recognize accessibility and <br /> disability covers a broad range of needs among individuals — for example, not every <br /> person with a disability is in a wheelchair, and a roll-in shower is not always the best or <br /> even a desirable feature in some units or for some occupants. It is important to provide <br /> some degree of flexibility and choice, and focus on universal design principles that make <br /> units more livable for people of all abilities is recommended. <br /> AB 2787 — Model Universal Design Local Ordinance for single-family, duplex and triplex <br /> projects <br /> In 2002, the State adopted AB 2787, which authorized the State Department of Housing <br /> and Community Development (HCD) to develop guidelines and a model local jurisdiction <br /> ordinance for new for-sale residential construction that incorporates principles of universal <br /> design. HCD developed a Model Universal Design Ordinance, and local jurisdictions may <br /> adopt a local ordinance that is in substantial conformance and/or substantially similar to <br /> the Model Ordinance (Attachment 1). The Model Ordinance may only be applied to <br /> single-family, duplex or triplex units (or some combination thereof), except custom built <br /> homes; in other words, it does not overlap with the scope of the CBC's accessibility <br /> requirements for private developments. <br /> The "substantially similar" requirement means that a locally adopted version would have <br /> to address a similar range of project types as listed in the Model Ordinance (i.e., buildings <br /> of three or fewer units) and could not expand it to encompass larger multi-family projects. <br /> Nonetheless, the Model Ordinance does provide some ability to expand the application of <br /> universal design to more projects. The Model Ordinance also offers the option to apply <br /> either a mandate to install universal design features by the developer (i.e., built in <br /> conjunction with a project), or as a mandate to offer these features to prospective owners <br /> to include in a new unit and installed at the purchaser's request. <br /> The range of features in the Model Ordinance includes widely accepted recommendations <br /> for universal design such as step-free entries, minimum doorway and passageway widths, <br /> bathtubs or showers consistent with established standards for accessibility, switches and <br /> receptacles at heights that don't require standing or bending, non-slip flooring, accessible <br /> appliances, single-handle faucets, pull-out shelves, closets with adjustable height rails, <br /> and accessible workspaces. <br /> Locally, the City of Dublin and the City of Fremont have adopted versions of the Model <br /> Universal Design Ordinance, and Pleasanton could consider doing the same. Note that <br /> both cities mentioned they have, for the most part, taken the approach of not mandating a <br /> majority of these features be constructed in a project, but instead requiring them to be <br /> offered to prospective buyers for installation at their cost. This approach reflects the fact <br /> Page 4 of 7 <br />